At the Boston Museum of Fine arts there is a famous scene depiciting Nefertiti smiting a female prisoner. Here is a picture from wikimedia commons

The display actually shows two talatats. This one with Nefertiti, but there is another one that fits to the bottom left which shows another boat with another smiting scene. You can only see the legs of the person smiting and but the prisoner is visible. It's only one person and not several as we see in the scenes by for instance Ramesses II. I thought is might even be a female prisoner, but I am not entirely sure of that.

the smiting scene on a boat is ringing bells, but i don't remember why. i would think nefertiti would be shown doing anything akhenaten was, so whether he was on one side of a pylon for instance and her on the other i don't know._________________heaven won't take me.......hell's afraid i'll take over.....

So these must be separate scenes as one takes place on a boat and the other in a building.

The other scene (mentioned in our older discussion) seems to show Nefertiti several times? and even as a sphinx. Too bad we cannot see the top half of the other smiting person. Would be interesting to see if it's Akhenaten or another image of Nefertiti._________________Math and Art: http://mathematicsaroundus.blogspot.com/

I was looking at the scene again and I started to wonder if the structure we see could be a cabin on the deck of the ship? I wonder if it's part of the decoration of the ship? (instead of a scene taking place on the ship)

That made me wonder, just what kind of ship is this? Is this part of the Egyptian fleet? Is this a type of war ship, or is it a more personal ship to be used by the queen? If it's a war ship, then the war scenes certainly make sense.

Which lead me to another question: have any remains of these Egyptian ships been found? There is reference to ships in the Egyptian Fleet. I remember reading about a ship with a name dedicated to Amenhotep III for instance.

Which leads to another question: how many artifacts are still at the bottom of the Nile river? Would that be where we expect to find remains of such ships. Come to think of it, it may just be the case that they took the ships apart and reused parts?_________________Math and Art: http://mathematicsaroundus.blogspot.com/

The small figure of the queen, smaller even then the rowers, has always lead me to assume that the smiting scene is a decoration on the fo'csle of the Queen's barge rather than Nefertiti being depicted smiting on a barge - if you follow me. The heads on the ends of the stern paddles show that Nefer's image was all over her barge.

The Nefertiti smiting scene appears to be a decoration on the boat.
I don't think it would be on an actual cabin, but some Egyptian ships had platforms with bulwarks, and sometimes canopies, fore and aft...

The only other 'his and hers' smiting scenes I'm aware of are on Nubian temple facades. There is one featuring Queen Amanitore in Meroe....

But the poor recipients of the smiting appear to be male in that case...

Nefertiti was shown in kingly poses because she was the co-regent of Akhenaten and even is carved wearing a kingly crown on one stela. Manetho wrote that there were three kings named "Acencheres" and the first was a woman and a king's daughter. So Nefertiti became Ankhetkheperure I. This is my opinion. Exactly why Akhenaten made his wife a co-regent I cannot say. Perhaps because he was ill and needed to protect the interests of an infant son. We'll probably never know why--but the scenes remain to tell the tale.

Here are the signs of a coregent--and one that is meant to be temporary. A permanent prenomen does not contain the name of another king. These say "Ankhkheperure beloved of Neferkheperure" and "Ankhkheperure beloved of Waenre".